Phoebe in WonderlandAn independent cinema gem that combines stellar acting with thought-provoking and deftly-handled explorations of identity, parenting, and mental illness.Review by Todd Hertz | posted 3/09/2009 09:56AM

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Phoebe in Wonderland
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MPAA rating: PG-13 (for thematic material and brief strong language)

Genre: Drama
Theater release: March 06, 2009 Directed by: Daniel Barnz
Runtime: 1 hour 36 minutes
Cast: Elle Fanning (Phoebe Lichten), Felicity Huffman (Hillary Lichten), Bill Pullman (Peter Lichten), Patricia Clarkson (Miss Dodger), Ian Colletti (Jamie)
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"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, "it means what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less."
"The question is," said Alice, "whether you CAN make words mean so many different things."
Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass
Humpty Dumptyesque word users can be seen (and heard) everywhere. After all, the English language is often bent, twisted, and manipulated to serve the users' purposes. We see this in our use of labels: When someone doesn't fit into cultural standards (boys who are effeminate, children who act out), he or she often gets slapped with easy—but not always accurate—labels.

Elle Fanning as Phoebe
This is just one of the areas in which the Sundance Film Festivalselected Phoebe in Wonderland uses the themes of Lewis Carroll's classic tales to tell the story of a 9-year-old trying to make sense of herself and the real world around her. Phoebe Lichten (newcomer Elle Fanning, sister of Dakota) is the imaginative daughter of two intellectuals, Peter (Bill Pullman) and Hillary (Felicity Huffman). The latter is working on a book about Carroll's works, and her love for that world has been passed to Phoebe. Her imaginary "Looking Glass Land" is the only place where Phoebe feels comfortable. Stuck in a harsh, rules-based world she doesn't fit into, she longs to go to Alice's Wonderland, where "things aren't so fixed."
Phoebe's anxieties, questions, and internal struggles manifest in troubling ways. She mimics others, bursts into biting lines of mocking rhyme, and spits at people when threatened. She often feels an irresistible compulsion to blurt out inappropriate comments and repeat actions over and over. To make the school play, she decides she must complete a complicated series of clapping, turning, and stepping in squares. To her, this makes complete sense in a world where you must follow rules to get certain results.
When the school play turns out to be Alice in Wonderland, Phoebe finally finds a safe place. Here is her Wonderland: a place where she doesn't need to follow rules or fit cultural standards. She can finally be imaginative, vulnerable, but confident Phoebe.

Phoebe and her mom, Hillary (Felicity Huffman)
This movie isn't all about Phoebe, though. In fact, one of this film's biggest triumphs is that it depicts scenes between 9-year-olds and scenes between adults with the same respectful, truthful, realistic, and telling tone. We don't just hear about Phoebe; we see and feel her life. While Phoebe tries to figure out her world, her parents try to figure out Phoebe.
Hillary is the main vessel through which the film explores the idea of words and labels applied to people who don't fit into what one character calls the world's "awful normals." She angrily and stubbornly stands against labels placed on Phoebe by other kids, doctors, and school officials. When she was young, she says, she'd count telephone polls while riding in the car, believing that if she missed one, they would crash. Today, Hillary says, she'd get the label of obsessive compulsive. She tells a psychiatrist, "Your profession doesn't let kids be kids."
An immensely dense and intelligent film, Phoebe sets up meaningful parallels between its story and Alice in Wonderland while offering complementary storylines to emphasize and explore hefty material. For instance, alongside Hillary's battle against labels is a deftly navigated subplot involving a little boy named Jamie who likes dolls and wants to play a queen in the play. When kids cruelly attack Jamie with homosexual slurs, the kids' inspiring drama teacher corrects them in a stirring way—teaching them that "when you attach a word to someone, you better know what it means."

Patricia Clarkson as Miss Dodger
This theme is brilliantly capped off by Hillary's journey throughout the film. She learns that while misapplied labels are indeed damaging, properly used words—and the truths they represent—can bring understanding, relief, and hope. Perhaps most fulfilling is that this lesson, and the film's other themes, are not delivered in a pandering, spoon-fed way. Captivating and stirring scenes of characters working out meaning and wading through tough issues—in realistically messy ways—earn the film the right to present its lessons.